rliE MICHIGAN DAILf. The Fact That J.kci are frequc ntly v~ urn for two and more s:,asons by most particular men"i, 1is lut men- Ofth srvice and f f satisfaction fouind in tailoring Swits and 1 $10.[00 to r,> gi) _ YOUR SUIr T HISseason's style demai form-fitting clothes. TI makes it absolutely necessary tl experts work on your suit from'1 start. And of course, you requ all wool materials, in your cho of shade, fabric, and cut. You'll get just what you wis at The Big Store. I I FASHION PARK ADLER-ROCHESTER CLOTHCRAFT $15 to $35 The Stea-Bloch C6.. 1916. "INDUE NSCHMITT APPEL & CO., Main St. -0 -w 1 (~1 avdloo' over o ur Special at $22.00, any style US O TE Y 308 aS. ° 0 IERY state St. i TUo E H -FRBAC (t SONS COMPANY Sc:ientifi c Apparatus, Chemicals and Student Laboratory Supplies for PBiology, Histology,, Bacteriology, Patthology, and Anatomy TUE, (a SON CO. 200-208 L. L.Ibarty St. 1d N -~ - I, Needed in Eye Fxarni make yc ir y -q givin t) F titr- ..}f ~ h~ '' IC .:; i Sr Ca.s In ,dy ~'~t-'r ei deuce. Phon 233%.1Cvi-14 LOST-Moorie 1 -w- -.. JabLc unta pen. 917 St< t. tro.2e)J ixovl-".13 LOST--On Sou at;,v i u 1, al- mnacaan. Call 11- ovIA-l6-117 LO T C;day morni.;i1.,rph se phone 1309. nOv14 on Stat. Rand P'miis Shoo (q)pon Willams one~2.O hi] ad four reward. sic l4215 LOST-Ago oani' nred Lester S ~e~ 'wri 37E. Willianm, zniovla-16 FORl SA ._. 'L ~othome a four-) evi i .. h. -nmv.,. ouse; nleerin ol e o x riyfrom 19]11 t d)4 '~i ~ o,~oing Vailue a nr' n fF:~ alue," at the x1 s>cV. hf('lnce on1 V1l'a.onIrl lhila- delpinridVh v f ~ til- itiel ba n M1r. 1_ V* , i - wth the IMi7Chi: ;.lip. -'V "B' cimpanyin the c;pcye 3vis~ ni~r Prof . - om fle Qeco- nomis 'e- nx" c'x at the couff in -________ ing would be limited to the goose-step and shooting a rifle. Put this money wasted in university attempts into schools especially equipped for mili- tary training. There is a growing feeling that dis- ciplineC would be a good thing for the average, wayward American youth, and this argument is not entirely with- out its merits. But how will you give any effective discipline to a student, not a soldier, in three hours a week. You will find as much in your gym- nasium classes, with certainly a more scientific and enjoyable exercise, un- less discipline is valuable in propor- tion to its disagreeableness. What will you do in serious breaches of rules? Will you put him in solitary confine- ment on a bread-and-water diet for a few days, augmented by private reci- tations administered by some enthu- siastic militaristic professor? :Remem- ber, he is supposed to be a student and not a soldier. The uniforms are to cost $14.00. Do we finally want our institutions of higher education to be open to men of money only? By an occasional un- necessary addition of $14.00 to the tui- tion, with a corresponding rise of other expenses, we are traveling fast in that direction. Let us not forget that an increase of educated men is more to be desreci in a republic than a few men, perhaps one per cent, who have been exposed to military training. The first business of our universities is to edu- cate our citizens and to safeguard our nation's ideals, and everything that will help to defeat that purpose is 'of questionable value. One of the quick- est ways to check the true spirit of democracy is for the universities to adopt a spirit of autocracy and class rule. Thle adoption of compulsory services in one of the leading universities of the country will make a catching head- line for militarist newspapers and dan- gerously augment the military wave that just now is sweeping the country. It may become an innocent agent in widening the field of compulsory duty to our citizenship. Our military friends may say that's a good thing. Let me ask them: have we forgotten that only a few months ago our plat- form and press emphatically con- demned the European theory that the only way to insure peace is to be pre- pared for war? Are we to become dupes of the system we have just just- ly condemned? In this crisis, when military agitation is sweeping the country, let Michigan be a cool-headed mentor; let her attempt to strike a medium between extreme pacificists and radical military propagandists, and in our nation's test render her a valuable and enduring service. I favor some preparation for national defense, but I am opposed to adopting, in Michigan, which believes in elec- tives the classroom, in representative student government, a system that makes two years of compulsory mili- tary training service a condition pre- cedent to an education. Its adoption would mean a step backward for Mich- igan. GEORGE C. CLAASSEN, '17L. COPYRIGHT 9Y So. V.01" CQ g "HERE'S, SOMETHING TO THINK OVER" .*PSt iOA YOJ O.VVPRCS*A gn 'THE LITTLE SCHOOLMASTER SAYS": m CAME IN POP. MAT. WEEK WED. R I K O..z 25c to $z.oo NOV.HT5 SAT. GA RCNHT 25c to $1.50 G DETROIT z5c to $2.00 350 Orchestra 350 Orchestra Seats, $xo Seats, $i.so The Garrick Company will present LOU TELLEGEN And a notable cast IN THE WYNDHAM THEATER, LONDON, SENSATIONAL AND 4 DRAMATIC MYSTERY PLAY "THE WARE 'C'ASE" BY GEORGE PLEYDELL "You Will Never Forget the Trial Scene." Staged Under Personal Direction of Jessie Bonstelle and, Bertram Harrison. CAST: Gladys Hanson, Maude Hannaford, Robert Vivian, Chas. Derickson, Montague Love, Corliss Giles, A. P. Kaye, Henry Von Weiser, Albert Bruning, John Halliday, Robert Ayrton, Dana Parker. WEEK NOV. 22nd THANKSGIVING SPECIAL WM. A. BRADY'S Mastodonic Melodrama The World's LIFE Biggest Play Company and poduction direct froim the great triumphant run in the Manhattan Opera H-ouse, N. Y., and Auditorium,' Chicago. Special Thanksgiving Day Matinee. Other' Matinees, Wednesday and Saturday. Quality in clothes is like nature in a man. It is the element that governs future actions. Careful selection in each case insures best results. ED. V. PRICE & CO. produce a degree of tailoring from your individual measure that is bet- ter than the price would indicate. My new styles and woolens for Thanksgiving await your call. Reule, Conlin & Fiegel THE BIG STOR E 200-2@2.faf COMPULSORY MILITARY TRlI6IS CRITICIZED l oii't Try to Farce it on tile Whole Unit, the Plea of George C. Claassen Editor The Michigan Daily: Being a graduate, and therefore ex- empt from enlistment, I speak without personal prejudices. I am not opposed to the military training scheme if one word is re- moved, "Compulsory." As Americans, we believe in abiding by the decisions of majorities, but we are fundament- ally opposed to having one class, ac- cording to it's whim, legislate for an- other. If the, freshman and sophomore classes want military training, let the majorities in those classes decide for or against it, and then let the minor- ity abide with it, as we do in all other institutions of American government. Or, better still, if it is such a good, popular thin~,' let those who want it take it, but don't try to force it on the whole unit. Our military friends remind us of an intolerant religious sect, which, be- cause they believe a thing, feel it their solemn duty to shove it down the in- fidel throats of all others. They would pile upon others burdens grievous to be borne, but would themselves not so much as touch it. They are exempt,. you know.* For a select few to pass a law thrusting upon students of demo- cratic Michigan two years of univer- sally hated and odious military train- ing is decidedly un-American, opposed to fair play,, and a clear violation of representative government. Will it train the men? Ask any West Point rpan that question. Anyone who is conversant with military training knows that three hours a week under our available equipment would be time wasted. It contains a combination of two bad qualities, odious compulsion coupled with nothing accomplished. We need in our army and navy what we need in our administration of gov- ernment, schools, cities and industries --experts, men who can man ships and lead armies, neither of which training could be given here. Where are your horses, your ships, your airships, your artillery, your hardships? The train- Exeltusive Local Dealer 1309 S. Main 814 S. StateI low Zero 'Temperature Reported Washington, Nov. 13.-The low zero temperatures in the United States for the first time this season was reported to the weather bureau today from Bill- ings, Montana, Yellowstone Park, and Sheridan, Wyoming, where two degrees below zero was reported. It Was a German Submarine, Claim Rome, Nov. 13-Information has been given out by a member of the cabinet that it was a German, and not an Aus- trian submarine, which sank the An- cona. Hence the minister points out Germany has opened hostilities against Italy without a declaration of war. DEATH BY POISON IN XT Boston~, Nov. 13.-The death by jpoi- son of the Rev. Francis H. Leslie, of Northport, Mich., a missionary, sta- tioned at Oorfa, Asiatic Turkey, is -n- nounced by the American boa~do conmmissioners for foreign missiox>. Ambassador Morgenthou, a n stantinople, who notified the st . I. t, partment at Washington of the cIr reported that he was making athr ough investigation to deternii, tue responsibility, and that p din lx result of this inquiry, he had ;onn no opinion of the case. Lyndon's for Kodaks, films,fish ing. Open Suindays, 9:30 to 4: oily. He'd Love to Learn Her .identity, ff ut--- She Bought the Book on Which He Had Scribbled His Choice Th ii ights You who haven't much to do but loaf over your coffee, listen to a true story with moral, attached, and profit thereby. It was this way: One day last year, when it was time to map out a line of courses, a sophomore se- lected, as a snap, a course in French, hoping to "pull" a good mark and at the same time to increase his knowl- edge of the beautiful and aesthetic lan- guage. At the first meeting, of the class the instructor announced that the text for the ensuing semester would be "Les Miserables." Accordingly, our 'sopho- more hied himself to the nearest book- store and procured a brand new edi- P'i fVct- Hugo's fasmouls tale. Th OVSCp'V(IiSC a aya had be n eped.; dinhsxp timie o a* her i, ucdhm.eib Ccp'l)Z 't sy%,~ .nIeabriis tishn"'t enao iti'sxg THE THRILLING TALE OF OLD "DOC" HIALE (Continued from Page Four) gurgled around him, strange little thrills leaped up his spine and throuzgh his lower limbs. A specially prepared sponge; connected with 'a battery, was used by the attendant to rub down the' patient, and as this sponge, drippin~g with the spring water, was passed over his° back and 'shoulders,- he felt anew the pleasant thrills-a'nd he got well. He praised the wonderful wa- ter which could accomplish miracles, and sent his friends to try it. Soon the clientele would have reached such proportions as to outrival the follow- ing of Mt. Clemiens, and no one would have thought of wasting money 'on a trip to Baden Baden' when something just as good could be had at home. How Ann Arbor Lost Its Fame But one day the spring refused to give more water, and soon afterwards the bath house :burned. Dr. Hale was forced to abandon his humanitarian _i<< ? Z]! faeten9"the ,an- Tha ws on ainMr. 1:ale and hislik ofhealing wate'rs are nlow thigs 4 te ast an al that re- mains o !theintitution is thecircle T a<' < itst (;\:O'h~- xvii e tod net Snday)i ,f:tn- sles z, CTafi lectune- ;r i ; t ,,,o r CRINNELL BROS. MUSIC HOUSE 116 S. Main St. Phomu UKULELES FROM $6.00 UP-COMPETENT INSTRUCTIONS nil b- ' .i u e Zi dor vo It . _. tL'! Pr I _. fonri_ year .... . ... . . . _I_ IISO IRV.. 4l o a a P119 -